The PDPA was in control of Afghanistan before and after the death of Amin. The popular revolution in Afghanistan started before Amin and existed after Amin. Removing Amin from power does not overthrow the popular revolution; indeed, the popular revolution never chose Amin to lead them in the first place: he reached his position by assassination.
Yes, I'm sure the government installed by a foreign military and which sat solely at that military's tolerance felt 100% in control of Afghanistan's agenda. Not as if said military had just made it abundantly clear that if you do stuff they don't like (such as pursuing a non-aligned cold war policy), you disappear.
Or there's another way of looking at it: the United States would not have been satisfied with a change of leadership of Afghanistan from Amin to someone else in the PDPA.
"The US would've done worse!" is irrelevant to the point in discussion. We're discussing what actually happened. I believe that whenever a hypothetical implies something you don't much like, you call it a "counter-factual" and refuse to discuss it, IIRC?
Thus, to make your snide conclusion, you need to assume that Amin is the state, is the popular socialist movement, is the Saur revolution. There is no logical way around it.
Absolute bollocks. You've inferred a sense of continuity from the fact that the puppet came from the same party (completely irrelevant), to insinuate that nothing more meaningful happened than the removal of one man.
The removal of the head of government, plus the removal of all non-aligned socialists from power, and installation
of their favoured candidate, represents a comprehensive change of government and policy direction. To characterise this as anything else is reductionist and dishonest.
Like your own country. Or mine. OK.
All in accordance with public opinion, of course. Very nice to see that democracy is discarded immediately upon conflict with your domestic policy goals. /s
My own country had at least decriminalised my existence a decade prior. Not so your "liberatory" state.
The appeal to "democracy"... I don't even know where to start, that's such fucking callous drivel. Are you seriously defending the criminalisation of homosexuality if "public opinion" is against gay people? Please, follow your line of argument to its logical conclusion. That's what you've done, isn't it? Insinuated that it would be "undemocratic" not to persecute a minority if people didn't like us/them.
It's incredible how some "self-styled socialists" will lean hard into hard-right tropes so long as the power in question terms itself "socialist": we've had apologia for military occupation of a sovereign state, now we have condonement of violent minority persecution! Here I was thinking socialism was about fucking solidarity with workers regardless of race/sex/orientation.
So it's imperialism to attempt to prevent another power-- from the other side of the world-- from taking over a friendly country next door.
Nope. It's imperialism to take over that "friendly" country yourself and then justify it by saying someone else would've done it instead.
And they weren't very "friendly" once the occupation was underway (lest we forget the massive increase in civil unrest and civil war), which gives ample evidence that this intervention was hardly welcome.